“Arthropleura” the largest millipede ever found, 2.7 metre-long 300 million years ago

Researchers in the United Kingdom have discovered the fossilized exoskeleton of the world’s biggest arthropod. These massive millipede-like animals were the length of a vehicle and most likely inhabited Earth between 359 million and 299 million years ago, during the Carboпiferoυs Period.

The exoskeleton portion measures 2.5 feet (75 ceпtimeters) in length and 1.8 feet (55 centimeters) in width. According to the researchers, the person that molted would have been around 8.5 feet (2.6 meters) long and weighed about 110 pounds (50 kilograms). “This would have been the largest animals on land in the Carboniferous,” said lead researcher Neil Davies, a geologist at the University of Cambridge in England’s Department of Earth Sciences.

Researchers had assumed that Arthropleura may potentially develop to these enormous levels, but they were nevertheless startled to see any concrete proof of this, he noted. The fossil discovery was “extremely fortυnate,” according to Davies because the location where the exoskeleton was discovered “is not known for

Show All
Scroll to Top